Thursday, October 2, 2014

Wanna Live Forever . . ?

We should have an Apollo Space Race-style program to save our planet.

We are ingenious.  We are imaginative. We are often fantastically adventurous, and we have a tremendous capacity for compassion.  

But as a friend of mine put it the other day, mostly we are extremely myopic.

This make-or-break moment is a special time in history.  The problems are systemic. Most of the arguments concerning possible problem solving scenarios, and the eventual solutions we choose, usually involve how to fix these systems, and not how to discard them altogether.  We are constantly thinking “inside the box”, as they say.

For instance, we discuss current class and economic systems like they are laws of physics.  We talk about printed paper money like it is something other than an abstraction -instead of treating the imaginary financial notes like the made-up things they are.

We pretend there can only be so much cash to go around (…which is literally printed on presses and made up by banks in computers), that our debt is an insurmountable mountain… and that you can only owe so much, pay so much, live with so much, spend so much, afford to give away so little, cannot share or divide this limited resource, and that we must by all means keep it away from those who haven’t earned it…

Meanwhile, this (Clicking the quote will take you to the full article):



The stakes are as high as they are ever going to be. We are in… the beginning of a… or in the midst of an… or some say, a too late to turn back from- extinction event.

It also appears that people in positions of real influence lack the imagination to discuss anything other than how to fix this current system. 

It seems other influencers honestly think they will survive any global demise, for all their wealth and resources…

Worse yet- many appear resolved it’s already too late- and they should just do what they can, and get as much as they can, until it’s finally all over.  This cynical and morbid perspective is well expressed in the following monologue from a character played by actor Brian Cox, in the movie The Veteran:



Where is the ingenuity in thinking like that..? Where is any real sense of adventure..?

I believe in our ingenuity and imaginations, and our abilities.  But sometimes, well, going to another planet, or saving this one, has no immediate pay-off in the present economic context.  Sometimes the profit motive just ain't there... and it won't be good 'business', even if it might be good economics, or just make plain exploratory sense... that's the difference between government and business.  We choose to do things through government not to make a profit (though there’s no excuse for waste), or even to break even... but because it's needed, it's innovative, it’s adventuresome, it’s moral, improves the quality of our lives, or makes sense in some other way.  Maybe it saves our all our lives altogether.

What we need, if not an actual Apollo-style program to save ourselves, is at least a Space Race mindset.

This means we cannot continue to think small thoughts.  Here are questions I continually ask in order to provide myself a context out of which I can approach some issues.  They’re not the only questions I should probably ask by any means… but they’re an honest start for me, to keep me from thinking in the box:

1) What are ‘The Commons’ really, and do how we maintain the current condition of those ‘Commons’…  Aren’t these the current infrastructure of roads, bridges, rail, communications, energy, national parks, the world’s air (not only one nation’s, unless you live in a sealed dome) we breathe, the water we drink, education, healthcare, the lives of our cohabitant species, and the combined cultural knowledge and experience which is our historical national (no, too small…) global heritage..?    

2) How would you re-create an educated (see ‘The Commons’ above) populace which was once the envy of the world… a workforce which would have enough ingenuity and inventiveness to work in the next generation’s companies, and thrive in a global market (and how would that market have to look?), plus be equipped with a foundation of knowledge to save our species?

3) Because none of us are immortal, and all of us are aging- How would you keep between 60 and 75 percent of all personal bankruptcies from occurring, not to mention the personal emotional tragedies, which are directly related to ‘Medical Costs’ you, me, our spouses, our children, and our friends and families cannot ourselves/themselves carry (‘Commons’, again)?

4) How would you create ‘consumers’ so that businesses can flourish? Because businesses need customers before they hire anyone to fulfill the demand, and consumers have to have money in their pockets to be consumers (… and is even being a consumer in the traditional sense even sustainable)?

5) What historically or currently accurate successful models, from our own country’s  historical experience, or another’s, would you duplicate or make better, in order to achieve all this (we’re not talking some Ron-Paul-Keynesian-Economic Utopia, but real nuts-n-bolts what’s been working somewhere)?

6) What organizational missions, inventions, or legislative ideas floating around out there that we can support, or that my leaders support, which aspire to any of the above?

We have to be willing, no- not just willing- daring… we have to be courageous enough to direct our entire mental and physical resources in a race against planetary extinction, and nothing less than that. 

This is our generation’s lot… most definitely our children’s… and strangely…

This does not disturb me, so much as gets me all revved up. To me, this challenge sounds like a science fiction style adventure… even if we are already past a tipping point…

The stakes only make the adventure more exciting.


Saturday, September 27, 2014

Workers Unite (...and Franchisees too)!

     Small franchise owners have more in common with their workers than we've been lead to believe... The interests of so-called 'Corporate Stores' and 'Franchises' are frequently at odds.  Many have read the following, and it's often a revelation:  

"We are in the real estate business. The only reason we sell hamburgers is because they are the greatest producer of revenue from which our tenants can pay us rent."

  -Harry J. Sonneborn, former McDonald's CFO

     This disclosure is eye-opening to the franchisee who thinks they are a "restaurateur" (and not a "tenant").  

     I assisted in the management at a couple of small businesses. I've been close enough to make entries in books and know the realities of running a small franchise store, and a corporate one.  I think most agree that a sudden and immediate shift to a $15 minimum wage tomorrow would be a jolting disastrous quake, which is why implementation of such policies are done gradually and not all at once- stirred, not shaken. 

     Anyone who has managed a small franchise can appreciate the cash flow issues involved. These are some contextual issues I'd think about though, as a small business person in today's market:

 1) Econ 101 dictates, and history proves, a rise in wages means more customers spending more money at your doorstep. There has never, not in our economic history ever, been a period when a rise in the minimum wage has resulted in a large-scale collapse of businesses, both large or small... if you know of such an event, please point it out.... it has not ever happened. What does happen is exactly the opposite- those workers have more liquidity to spend on your burgers and pizza (and this often begins directly with their lunches, which they purchase everyday on lunch breaks, at your very establishments which they're working for)... 

2) Corporate stores especially (opposed to franchises) are making more than enough in profits-after tax, after deductions which include wages, to offset the costs of these raises in wages. These same corporations like to focus their arguments on how they'd have to raise their prices to cover the wage expense, when the truth is that there is are often hundreds of millions, even billions of 'tricklle-up' AGI dollars which are available, in addition to the extra flowing income they'd make at their cash registers, to offset any wage hike. Hundreds of millions, even billions... Most people can't imagine the scale of how much available corporate cash this is... Large corporations count on this so they can try to scare you into thinking such a hike would mean economic collapse, when what it really means is a redistribution of profit from 'shareholders', to 'householders'... we have no sense of scale.... 

3) As for franchise owners trying to make ends meet... sorry to say, but as hard as you work, and as many stores as you might own, this is another one of those issues where you are going have to realize the corporate stores have once again sold you a bad bill of goods, in that the conditions you are functioning under are simply not contextually a viable economic model... If what you are telling us is correct, that with your (franchise?) fees you can only function in low-wage, race to the bottom, and in otherwise parasitic economic conditions- and not one where the economy is actually thriving... then you need to rethink your investments immediately... 

     Because the writing is on the wall... this is not simply a fun, Internet political argument thread... this is a very real trending economic consideration which will threaten your economic survival too, just like it threatens your workers, because your fates are not in conflict, but are linked... 

     Because once again, franchise owner, 'corporate', as you and I may well already may know... is not your friend...